We are continuing to work on updates to our Privacy Policy and GDPR Compliance. Currently, I am missing certain information. That has been requested and will be added as soon as it is available. I am not able at this time to give an exact date for completion but I agree this is an urgent priority and will update the information ASAP.

New residential developments with Irish names in the North

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

Re: New residential developments with Irish names in the North

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

Re: New residential developments with Irish names in the North

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

Re: New residential developments with Irish names in the North

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

People are too scared

If you're living in a Nationalist area I don't see the problem.[/quote:3j5za409]

Darren - and you a knowledgeable man.

Put the address down on any piece of paper and you give away what you are. let us say you are going for a job. You put down your address and not only are you a fenian but an uppity fenian.

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

People are too scared

If you're living in a Nationalist area I don't see the problem.

Darren - and you a knowledgeable man.

Put the address down on any piece of paper and you give away what you are. let us say you are going for a job. You put down your address and not only are you a fenian but an uppity fenian.

It will cause problems.[/quote:4o1swbtz]

If there was a trend in the North of naming developments in Irish most Unionists wouldn't mind employing someone with a Gaeilge address. The North is already 90% divided.

Re: New residential developments with Irish names in the North

In every county in the Republic- bar Wicklow and Dublin- there is a significant (in many, many cases a large) number of new residential developments being named i nGaeilge amháin today.

Why hasn't the trend caught on in NI?

OK nobody really expects there to be many/any property developers from a Unionist background to be naming their developments in Irish but presumably you would think that the property developers from a Nationalist background would.

Is it that that there aren't many developers from a Nationalist background in the North?

Up until relatively recently it was illegal to name residential developments i nGaeilge amháin in the North. Maybe it's just a case of spreading the word amongst Nationalist developers that they can do so now?

I know there are a couple of developments around Newry named i nGaeilge amháin, but you would think that there would be more.

The local councils would go mental, the developers would get bad publicity from the anti-Irish fascist media.
They would call it an attack on their British identity etc...

It might be legal but the rotweilers are still there.
The housing estate would be open to vandalism from loyalists.

Re: New residential developments with Irish names in the North

Originally Posted by ArtyQueing

Darren - people are too scared - they know the ramifications

Of course it would be inadvisable to name them in Irish in border line areas like Nationalist West and North Belfast but I don't see the problem in Nationalist areas in rural Fermanagh, Tyrone, Armagh and Derry for example.